MONITORING FISH SPAWNING LOCATIONS AND MARINE MAMMAL SOUNDS WITH PASSIVE ACOUSTIC RECORDER ON A WAVE GLIDER

"Remote observations of marine animal behavior have one distinct advantage over direct observations: the observer is not present to disturb the animals. There are no vessel noises , no diver's bubbles , no people present that could alter the behavior of the animals being observed. Because...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luczkovich, Joseph J., NC DOCKS at East Carolina University, Rulifson, Roger, Sprague, Mark
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/ecu/f/0000-embargo-holder.txt
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Summary:"Remote observations of marine animal behavior have one distinct advantage over direct observations: the observer is not present to disturb the animals. There are no vessel noises , no diver's bubbles , no people present that could alter the behavior of the animals being observed. Because fishes and marine mammals are known sound producers , these animals' location while producing sounds during a mobile survey can be recorded , and their species identity determined; in some cases , their behavior can be associated with specific sounds. We used Blackbeard the Acoustic Wave Glider (AWG) to conduct affordable , mobile , long-term passive acoustic monitoring of marine animals and the coastal ocean acoustic environment off North Carolina. (Luczkovich et al. , in press). Passive acoustic methods from fixed recording platforms have been used previously to document spawning locations of weakfish , Cynoscion regalis , and other fishes in the drum family Sciaenidae in estuarine environments (Luczkovich et al. 2008). Others have demonstrated that sciaenid fishes make spawning ""drumming€ calls outside the inlets on the continental shelf (Conaughton and Taylor , 1995; Holt , 2008). However , ""chattering€ sounds that were reported offshore by Conaughton and Taylor (1995) were actually later shown to be due to striped cusk-eels , Ophidion marginatum. Here we report that choruses and individual calls of many fish (weakfish , striped cusk-eels , red drum , Sciaenops ocellatus , spotted sea trout , Cynoscion nebulosus , sea robins Prionotus sp. , oyster toadfish Opsanus tau and an unknown grouper Epinephelus sp.) were recorded during wave glider transects running along the 20 and 30 m depth isobaths along the continental shelf of North Carolina coast. Marine mammal sounds (humpback whales Megaptera novaeangliae and bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus) were also recorded during these excursions. The estuarine-dependent weakfish spotted seatrout , and red drum fishes (Sciaenidae) were more common in shallow areas (~20 m) near ...